ebook img

ERIC EJ852393: Grant Writing: Practice and Preparation of University Health Educators PDF

7 Pages·2003·0.07 MB·English
by  ERIC
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview ERIC EJ852393: Grant Writing: Practice and Preparation of University Health Educators

Grant Writing: Practice and Preparation of University Health Educators JoAnn Kleinfelder, James H. Price, and Joseph A. Dake ABSTRACT This national survey of health education faculty (n = 282) found that the vast majority (88%) had been awarded a grant in the past 5 years, usually in amounts of less than $10,000. Less than one in four had received grants of $250,000 or more. Although less than one in four faculty (23%) felt prepared to write grants immediately following graduation, four of five currently felt prepared to do so. Two barriers to grant writing were identified by a majority of faculty: heavy teaching loads (68%) and administrative or committee assignments (55%). Finally, 90% of the faculty thought grant writing should be part of formal graduate student training, yet only 65% reported offering grant writing training to their graduate students. The position of university/college pro- Recently health education journals and and incentives to grant writing. fessor requires a wide variety of skills. These online job banks were reviewed regarding In an early study, Monahan (1993) sur- skills are traditionally divided into three faculty positions for university health edu- veyed full-time faculty at eight New Jersey broad areas: teaching, research, and service. cators during the 2001/2002 academic year. Within each of these three areas, there are Of the job postings found, 14 specifically JoAnn Kleinfelder, MEd, is a graduate assistant numerous competencies which professors identified the job as a health education fac- in the Department of Public Health, University are expected to meet (Tucker, 1992). For ulty position. Nine of the 14 positions men- of Toledo, Toledo, OH 43606; James H. Price, example, in the research arena faculty are tioned an expectation of grant writing ac- PhD, MPH, is a professor of public health in the expected to be able to remain current in the tivity. If grant writing is viewed as an Department of Public Health at the University literature; synthesize large volumes of in- important professional attribute, it would of Toledo. Joseph A. Dake, MPH, is an instruc- formation; design studies; carry out stud- be expected that research could be easily tor of health education in the Division of Health, ies; analyze data; write their manuscript re- found on this topic. However, there is a Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202. sults for publication; and write grants to dearth of studies that have explored grant fund their research agenda (Sowers-Hoag writing activity of faculty. Furthermore, Review of this manuscript was conducted by the & Harrison, 1998). these studies have mostly targeted barriers Board of Associate Editors. American Journal of Health Education — January/February 2003, Volume 34, No. 1 47 JoAnn Kleinfelder, James H. Price, and Joseph A. Dake state colleges regarding their perspectives on a variety of disciplines at a Midwestern re- face similar barriers and incentives to grant barriers to grant writing. They identified search university. They found that junior writing as nonhealth education faculty, that heavy teaching and advising loads, other faculty who had acquired some grant train- courses in grant writing preparation would scholarly and entrepreneurial interests, ing as part of their doctoral or postdoctoral not be required in the majority of graduate committee/administrative assignments, and programs still required additional training health education programs, and that barri- lack of advance warning of funding oppor- in the grant writing process. Barriers to ers to grant writing would be significantly tunities as barriers. Provisions for techni- grant writing identified by more than 90% related to the amount of grant activity in cal assistance in seeking external funding of these junior faculty included teaching which faculty are involved. sources, preparing proposals and budgets, loads, inadequate administrative support, getting necessary approvals, and dealing and too many committee assignments, METHODS with campus business staff were cited as whereas incentives were creating new Respondents important incentives to grant writing. In knowledge through their grant funded re- The Directory of Institutions Offering addition to recognizing barriers and incen- search, the importance of grants in tenure Undergraduate and Graduate Degree Pro- tives, it was found that less than 20% of fac- decisions, and being able to build a profes- grams in Health Education was used to iden- ulty at the surveyed institutions were ac- sional reputation as a capable researcher. tify all universities with health education tively involved in grant activities, whereas A recent study of a Midwestern pre- majors (American Association for Health about half said they rarely or never engaged dominately undergraduate institution Education, 1997). The institutions were in grant writing activity. found that the top three barriers to faculty cross-referenced with the Eta Sigma In a similar study tenure track faculty in grant writing were heavy teaching loads, too Gamma (1999) Directory of College and the College of Education at Texas A & M many committee and/or administrative as- University Health Education Programs and University reported identical barriers as signments, and heavy advising loads Facilities to obtain the names and addresses found by Monahan (1993) and also cited (Sterner, 1999). Incentives for grant writ- of health education professors. Institutions lack of training in grant writing, lack of ing identified by these faculty were released were then randomly spot-checked at their knowledge of funding sources, and budget- time to work on funded projects, released Web sites to confirm that data was current. ing as additional barriers. Respondents sug- time to prepare grant proposals, and being A total of 970 health education faculty gested that, as incentives, universities should provided the opportunity to support their members were identified. From this list a create grant offices, provide staff support/ research. These studies identified nearly computerized random sample of 500 fac- equipment, and place equal emphasis on identical barriers and incentives for general ulty were selected. The research protocol grant writing and receipt of grant awards faculty and College of Education faculty. was approved by the Human Subjects Re- (Dooley, 1995). The Graduate Competencies for Health search Review Committee of the university. Boyer and Cockriel (1998) approached Educators from the National Commission the barrier/incentive dichotomy of grant for Health Education Credentialing (1998) Instrument writing through the perceptions of tenured and the Core Competencies for Public A questionnaire on faculty and gradu- and nontenured faculty selected from Health Professionals from the Council on ate student grant writing activities and per- American Association of University Profes- Linkages Between Academia and Public ceptions was created through a comprehen- sors member institutions. Consistent with Health Practices (2001) both cite the need sive review of the literature and through Dooley (1995), lack of knowledge regard- for health education professionals to be able personal communication with several ing budgets and funding sources and lack to prepare proposals for funding from ex- highly published health education faculty of training were regarded as significant bar- ternal sources. However, questions regard- members. The four-page, 24-item question- riers to grant writing. Consideration of ing grant activity exclusive to graduate naire had 18 items that addressed faculty grant writing for tenure or promotion de- health education programs remain unan- grant writing training, perceived prepara- cisions and the inclusion of a strong com- swered. No studies were found that targeted tion, perceived barriers to grant writing, im- mitment to grant writing from the college professors in health education and their portance of grant writing at their institu- president qualified as strong incentives. Al- grant writing activities nor the training of tion, perceptions of grant writing training though tenured and nontenured faculty re- graduate students in grant writing. There- for graduate students, and their actual grant ported the same barriers and incentives, fore, the purpose of this study was to iden- writing activity, as well as 6 demographic nontenured faculty regarded both as more tify barriers and incentives to grant writ- and background questions. Most items re- important than did tenured faculty. ing, explore the level of faculty grant activity quired the respondents to select their re- In a follow-up study Boyer and Cockriel and determine grant writing preparation in sponses from a series of potential answers. (2001) examined the factors that influenced graduate health education programs. It was Five items required responses on a 5-point the pursuit of grants by junior faculty from hypothesized that health education faculty Likert-type scale. The questionnaire was 48 American Journal of Health Education — January/February 2003, Volume 34, No. 1 JoAnn Kleinfelder, James H. Price, and Joseph A. Dake sent to five published authorities in the ar- writing training for graduate students were institutions had a grants office. Further- eas of university teaching or survey research, calculated using Pearson product moment more, the majority of faculty reported their requesting their critical review to establish correlation coefficients and chi-square institution’s grants office provided the fol- content validity. Minor changes were made analyses. Differences in perceptions of grant lowing three services: conducts searches for to item format or item wording based on writing by academic rank were calculated grants (73%), conducts grant related train- recommendations of the questionnaire re- by analysis of variance (ANOVA) and chi- ing workshops (70%), and helps write seg- viewers. Internal reliability was assessed on square analysis. Significance was set at ments of the grants (58%) (Table 2). the responses to the final survey using p≤.05. Kuder-Richardson 20 for the dichotomous response items and Cronbach alpha for the RESULTS Likert-type response items. Because of the Demographics and Background Charac- Table 1. Demographics and wide variety of grant topics on the ques- teristics Background Characteristics of tionnaire, it was anticipated that the inter- A total of 500 questionnaires was sent to Health Education Faculty nal reliabilities would be low, KR =.52 and health education faculty and 28 were 20 .56, respectively, were found for the two Characteristics N % nondeliverable (e.g., moved, deceased, etc.). types of items. The response rate was 60% (282/472). The Sex: Procedure responding faculty members were almost Male 151 53.5 A variety of techniques was used to help evenly divided by sex, three-fourths were ten- Female 129 45.7 increase the response rate for this survey, ured, and almost half were full professors. Tenure status: including limiting the length of the ques- The vast majority of respondents had doc- Tenured 216 76.6 tionnaire to four pages; printing the ques- toral degrees (99%) and were full-time fac- Tenure track 47 16.7 tionnaire on colored paper (green); using a ulty (97.5%). A plurality (38%) taught in Nontenure track 16 5.7 personally addressed, hand-signed cover departments with 6–10 colleagues (Table 1). Rank: letter assuring confidentially of responses; Grant Writing Activity of Faculty Full professor 135 47.9 including a stamped, self-addressed return The vast majority (88%) of faculty had Associate professor 90 31.9 envelope; and mailing the questionnaire been awarded one or more grants in the past Assistant professor 55 19.5 through first-class mail (Church, 1993; 5 years as a primary or coinvestigator. The Instructor 1 .4 King, Pealer, & Bernard, 2001). Addition- majority (59%) had been awarded 5 or Employment status: ally, a three-wave mailing was used to maxi- fewer grants in the past 5 years. The major- Full time 275 97.5 mize the return rate (Dillman, 2000). Two ity (51%) of faculty had received grant Part time 5 1.8 weeks after the initial mailing, a second amounts of less than $10,000. Less than one mailing of the questionnaires and coded, Highest degree in four had received grants of $250,000 or stamped, self-addressed return envelopes obtained: more. Of those who had received grant Doctorate 279 98.9 were mailed to nonrespondents with a funding, the majority (53%) had received Master’s 3 1.1 hand-signed cover letter urging a prompt internal university funding. Faculty were response. Two weeks later a hand-signed, Number of full-time equally likely to have received federal or state color-matched postcard mailing was sent as faculty in department: grants, 45 and 44%, respectively (Table 2). a reminder for those who had not yet re- 1–5 81 28.7 Less than one in four faculty (23%) felt 6–10 108 38.3 sponded to the second mailing. prepared to write grants immediately fol- 11–20 80 28.4 Statistical Analysis lowing their graduate education. However, 21–50 8 2.7 SPSS 10.0 for Windows was used to ana- four of five felt they were currently prepared Number of years lyze the data. Descriptive data were created to write grants. The faculty were asked to teaching full time at for individual items (e.g., frequencies, per- identify where they had received training to college level: centages, and ranges), and measures of cen- write grants by selecting from eight alter- (Range=1–45 years) tral tendency (e.g., means and standard de- native answers, one of which was the generic 1–10 years 86 30.4 viations) were calculated for selected category “other.” Only two sources of train- 11–20 years 89 31.5 variables. Comparisons by perceived barri- ing were identified by 50% or more of the 21–30 years 79 27.9 ers to writing grants, perceived importance faculty: through trial and error (57%) and 31–45 years 26 9.4 of obtaining grants for promotion and ten- informally through colleagues (50%). ure, and perceived importance in grant Almost 98% of the faculty reported their Note: N=282. American Journal of Health Education — January/February 2003, Volume 34, No. 1 49 JoAnn Kleinfelder, James H. Price, and Joseph A. Dake A Pearson product moment correlation both tenure (55%) and promotion (60%) The faculty were asked if they thought coefficient was calculated to examine the (Table 4). grant writing should be part of the formal relationship between faculty members’ per- When the faculty were asked whether training of graduate students, and 90% re- ceived level of help from their grants office their department expected new faculty to sponded affirmatively (Table 5). However, and the number of grants a faculty mem- be involved in grant writing almost 82% when faculty were asked if their depart- ber received. The correlation was found not responded affirmatively. This is the same ments offered grant writing training for to be significant (r=-.007, p= .91). However, percentage as those who claimed it was their graduate students, considerably fewer there was a significant correlation (r=.426, moderately important, important, or very (65%) responded affirmatively. Of the pro- p<.001) between a faculty members’ per- important for promotion (82%). grams that did offer grant writing training, ceived current level of preparation to write A series of Pearson product moment they were almost evenly divided as elective grants and the number of grants the fac- correlation coefficients were calculated for (32%) or required (28%) courses. ulty member had received. level of faculty grant activity by perceived It was hypothesized that the majority of Barriers to Grant Writing and Their importance of obtaining grants for promo- health education faculty believed that Solutions tion (r=-.107, p=.07) or to receive tenure graduate students could learn grant writ- Faculty members were asked to identify (r=-.116, p=.052). The importance of grants ing through more informal training, such their perceived barriers to grant writing for promotion or tenure was not a signifi- as by having them assist the faculty in their from a list of seven potential responses. Two cant impetus for faculty to write grants. grant writing activity. This hypothesis was of the barriers were identified by a major- Graduate Student Preparation supported; 64% of respondents claimed ity of faculty members: heavy teaching loads (68%) and administrative or committee assignments (55%). About one in four Table 2. Grant Writing Activity of College Health Education Faculty (28%) claimed they were currently not ad- Item N % equately prepared to write grants (Table 3). The faculty were also requested to iden- Have you been awarded grants as a primary tify how their university could help them or coinvestigator? increase their grant writing activity by se- Yes 49 88.3 lecting all applicable choices from a list of Full time faculty with grants in the last 5 years: seven, one of which was “other.” There were 1–5 grants 167 59.2 four items selected by half or more of the 6–10 grants 62 21.9 faculty: provide released time (72%), offer 11–20 grants 16 5.8 technical support (56%), offer personal 21–30 grants 3 1.2 support (56%), and assign a portion of the Grant amounts received: indirect funds to the faculty member (49%). Less than $10,000 144 51.2 The faculty were least supportive of giving $10,000–$49,999 111 39.6 greater consideration to grant writing for $50,000–$149,999 97 34.5 promotion and tenure (28%) (Table 3). $150,000–$249,999 64 22.8 It was hypothesized that there would be $250,000–$499,999 60 21.5 $500,000–$1 million 45 16.2 a significant relationship between the num- Greater than $1 million 49 17.5 ber of perceived barriers to writing grants and the number of grants obtained. How- Source of grants awarded in past 5 years: ever, the relationship (Pearson product Internal university 149 52.7 moment correlation) was not significant Federal 128 45.4 (r=-.053, p=.37). State 123 43.6 Private 102 36.2 Importance of Grants for Careers Local 39 13.9 The faculty were asked to rate the im- Other 19 6.8 portance of obtaining grants for tenure and Services provided by grant office: promotion by selecting their answers from Searches for grants 205 72.7 Likert-type responses (very important=5 to Conducts grant related workshops 196 69.5 not important=1). The responses to both Helps write grants 164 58.2 questions were similar; a majority claimed Continues on next page grants were important or very important for 50 American Journal of Health Education — January/February 2003, Volume 34, No. 1 JoAnn Kleinfelder, James H. Price, and Joseph A. Dake that their faculty attempted to involve grants, and no significant difference was sors) found no significant differences graduate students in grant writing activity. found (offered a course, M =.61, SD=.27 (F=2.23, df=2, 278, p=.11). Also, a chi- However, when faculty were queried regard- versus did not offer a course, M=.60, square (2 x 3) on perceptions of whether ing how well prepared their average gradu- SD=.27; t=.301, df=247, p=.76). Finally, it formal grant writing should be part of ate student was in grant writing after was hypothesized that faculty who were not graduate education by academic rank found graduation, less than half (46%) of respon- well prepared to write grants when they no significant differences (x2=5.00, p=.29). dents perceived the students as moderately graduated but who now perceived them- to very well prepared. selves to be well prepared to write grants DISCUSSION A chi-square (2 x 2) analysis of whether would more likely support formal grant The vast majority of health education faculty members perceived formal grant writing for their graduate students than fac- faculty appear to be active in grant writing. writing training as important in graduate ulty who believed they had not been pre- This most likely reflects the importance re- student training by whether their depart- pared at graduation and who believed they ported by the faculty of obtaining grants for ment offered a grant writing course found were currently not prepared. A chi-square promotion and tenure. Grant writing by no significant difference (x2=.095, p=.76). (2 x 2) analysis (x2=.130, p=.79) failed to health educators was usually for modest Furthermore, a t-test was calculated for confirm this hypothesis. amounts (less than $150,000 per grant). whether the department offered a grant Grant Writing Perceptions by Rank This may be due to a variety of reasons: writing course by the mean percentage of An ANOVA for barriers by academic more grants for health education may be faculty in the department who had written rank (assistant vs. associate vs. full profes- available at the lower funding range; many quality studies in health education may be able to be done for lesser amounts; and the Table 2. (Continued) faculty may not have been prepared enough in grant writing to compete for larger grants Item N % (those greater than $250,000). The results Completes all administrative work for grant submission 133 47.2 of the current study partially support the Other 43 15.2 last reason, not professionally prepared to There is no grant office at our institution 7 2.5 write grants. Less than one in four faculty claimed they felt prepared to write grants Grant writing training: immediately after their graduation, but four Through trial and error 161 7.1 Informally through colleagues 141 50.0 of five felt they were currently prepared to I have had no formal grant writing training 105 37.2 do so. Thus, many of these faculty mem- Through college or university workshops 96 34.0 bers seem to have learned grant writing in In my graduate program 78 27.7 an apprenticeship fashion through trial- Professional conferences or workshops 75 26.6 and-error and through colleagues. Through professional readings 73 25.9 Because most faculty write grants for Other 29 10.3 smaller sums, the current apprenticeship How prepared do you feel you were to write grants immediately form of learning grant writing needs to be following your graduate education? replaced with more formal graduate train- Very well prepared 7 2.5 ing. The findings of this study also indicate Well prepared 22 7.8 that the vast majority of faculty think grant Moderately prepared 35 12.4 writing should be part of the formal train- Neutral 53 18.8 ing of graduate students, even though only Minimally prepared 65 23.0 two-thirds claimed their departments were Not at all prepared 63 22.3 currently offering grant writing training. How well prepared do you feel you are currently to write grants? However, more than half of the respondents Very well prepared 80 28.4 said their health faculty attempt to involve Well prepared 100 35.5 graduate students in grant writing activity. Moderately prepared 53 18.8 Neutral 26 9.2 Still, the majority of faculty believe that the Minimally prepared 18 6.4 average graduate student is only moderately Not at all prepared 4 1.4 to minimally prepared to write grants after graduation. The authors believe that grant Note: N=282. writing training should be offered in doc- American Journal of Health Education — January/February 2003, Volume 34, No. 1 51 JoAnn Kleinfelder, James H. Price, and Joseph A. Dake toral programs as a required course and as Table 3. Perceived Barriers to Grant Writing and Suggested Solutions an elective in master’s degree programs. We support this recommendation based par- Item N % tially on this study’s finding that the ma- Common barriers to grant writing: jority of faculty reported that their depart- Heavy teaching loads 192 68.1 ment expects new faculty to write grants. Administrative or committee assignments 156 55.3 Boyer and Cockriel (2001) also concluded Other scholarly and entrepreneurial interests 118 41.8 that “it is imperative that graduate pro- Lack of advance warning of funding opportunities 93 33.0 grams institute training programs in pro- Not adequately prepared to write grants 79 28.0 posal writing for future faculty” (p. 22). In Lack of assistance for proposal submission 77 27.3 addition to training for future faculty, this Other 58 20.6 training in proposal writing would also Suggestions to universities for increasing grant writing: serve students who obtain jobs outside of Provide released time to work on grants 203 72.0 academia whose jobs may demand grant Offer technical support (locate grants, write writing skills. proposals, budgeting) 159 56.4 It is noteworthy that our findings iden- Offer personnel support (graduate assistant, secretary) 159 56.4 Assign a portion of indirect funds to faculty members 138 48.9 tified barriers (heavy teaching loads; admin- Offer administrative support (travel funds, equipment) 131 46.5 istrative or committee assignments; other Give greater consideration to grant writing in promotion scholarly or entrepreneurial interests) and & tenure 78 27.7 inducements (provide release time; offer Other 23 8.2 technical support and offer personnel sup- port) that were identical to those found in Note: N=282. previous research (Boyer & Cockriel, 2001; Monahan, 1993; Sterner, 1999). This cor- roboration helps to confirm the external Table 4. Importance of Grants for Career Advancement validity of the current study’s results. Although the findings from this study Item N % concur with previous research and reveal Importance for tenure: new information relative to health educa- Very important 85 30.1 tion faculty, its results are descriptive. New Important 71 25.2 research should focus on findings that are Moderately important 65 23.0 quantitative and predictive. The reasons Minimally important 36 12.8 why grant writing courses are not required Not important 23 8.2 in doctoral programs or offered as electives Importance for promotion: in master’s programs needs to be explored. Very important 83 29.4 It is also suggested that grant writing activ- Important 85 30.1 ity of faculty in undergraduate programs be Moderately important 62 22.0 surveyed and compared to grant writing Minimally important 36 12.8 activity in graduate health education pro- Not important 15 5.3 grams. Additionally, studies should explore Does your department expect new how some graduate students became faculty to engage in grant writing? involved in grant writing activity and oth- Yes 230 81.6 ers did not, and whether such activity Note: N=282. resulted in faculty members who were more successful at obtaining grants. Studying fac- ulty members who have been highly suc- writing capability of future and current their faculty involved in grant writing. Few cessful in their careers at obtaining grants health education faculty. studies have been reported in the literature should be explored to help develop a The results of this study and others cited on innovative techniques for improving potentially common core of factors (e.g., should give department administrators a grant writing activities in university faculty. personal and/or environmental attributes) better understanding of the barriers and One such study reported the positive grant that might be used to facilitate the grant incentives for improving the proportion of writing environment created when a stand- 52 American Journal of Health Education — January/February 2003, Volume 34, No. 1 JoAnn Kleinfelder, James H. Price, and Joseph A. Dake 4), 61–68. Table 5. Graduate Student Preparation for Grant Writing Boyer, P. G., & Cockriel, I. (2001). Grant per- Item N % formance of junior faculty across disciplines: Motivators and barriers. Journal of Research Should formal grant writing be a part of graduate education? Administration, 2, 19–23. Yes 253 89.7 Church, A. H. (1993). Estimating the effect Department offers grant writing training for of incentives on mail survey response rates: A graduate students: Yes 182 64.5 meta-analysis. Public Opinions Quarterly, 57, Elective course 89 31.6 62–79. Required course 80 28.4 Council on Linkages Between Academia and Do your faculty attempt to involve graduate students Public Health Practice. (2001). Core Competen- in grant writing activity? cies for Public Health Professionals. Retrieved ??? Yes 180 63.8 from www.trainingfinder.org/competencies/ How prepared is the average graduate student in comp.pdf [AU: Please give date of retrieval.] grant writing when he/she graduates? Dillman, D. A. (2000). Mail and Internet sur- Very well prepared 5 1.8 veys: The tailored design method. New York: Prepared 35 12.4 Wiley-Interscience. Moderately prepared 91 32.3 Dooley, L. M. (1995). Barriers and induce- Minimally prepared 101 35.8 ments to grant related activity by a college of Not at all prepared 42 14.9 education faculty. Research Management Review Note: N=282. 7(2), 10–24. Easter, L. M., & Shultz, E. L. (1998). Ten ing committee of colleagues offered social extent that the 40% nonresponders differ heads work better than one: An innovative support, collaboration, and technical exper- from the 60%, a possible nonresponse bias model for collaborative, college-wide grant writ- tise (Easter & Shultz, 1998). exists. To the extent such a bias exists, this ing. Research Management Review, 10, 24–32. Finally, the limitations of this study, would be a threat to the external validity of Eta Sigma Gamma (1999). Directory of In- which could result in potential bias of the the results. The survey explored only one stitutions Offering Undergraduate and Graduate results, need to be reviewed. The current area (monothematic), grant writing, in Degree Programs in Health Education. Muncie, study surveyed health education faculty depth. To the extent this may have sensi- IN: Eta Sigma Gamma, Ball State University. only. Therefore, these findings may not be tized some faculty to grant writing issues King, K. A., Pealer, L. N., & Bernard, A. L. generalizable to faculty and departments and resulted in a response-set bias, then this (2001). Increasing response rates to mail ques- outside of health education. Graduate would have been another threat to the in- tionnaires: A review of inducement strategies. health education programs at universities ternal validity of the results. The majority American Journal of Health Education, 32, 4–15. in the United States only were surveyed. of the aforementioned limitations are char- Monahan, T. C. (1993). Barriers and induce- Therefore, these findings may not represent acteristic of most self-report surveys and are ments to grant-related activity by New Jersey grant writing activity of faculty from pro- not inherent weaknesses of this study. state college faculty. SRA Journal, 24(4), 9–26. grams at institutions outside of the conti- National Commission for Health Education nental United States. Due to the potentially ACKNOWLEDGMENT Credentialing. (1998). A Competency-Based sensitive nature of assessing faculty mem- The authors thank Susan K. Telljohann, Framework for Graduate Level Health Educators. bers’ professional activities, some faculty HSD, CHES, for her assistance in data Allentown, PA: Author. may have answered questions in a socially collection. Sowers-Hoag, K., & Harrison, D. F. (1998). desirable manner. If so, this would repre- Finding an academic job. Graduate survival skills. sent a threat to the internal validity of the REFERENCES Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. study. The survey questionnaire was closed- American Association for Health Education. Sterner, A. (1999). Faculty attitudes toward format and did not attempt to obtain addi- (1997). Directory of institutions offering under- involvement in grant-related activities at a pre- tional information from the faculty. If other graduate and graduate degree programs in dominantly undergraduate institution (PUI). important grant-related questions or alter- health education. Journal of Health Education, SRA Journal, 31, 5–21. nate responses to the existing questions 28, 281–295. Tucker, A. (1992). Chairing the academic de- were missed, then this could be a threat to Boyer, P. G., & Cockriel, I. (1998). Factors partment: leadership among peers. Phoenix, AZ: the internal validity of the study. The re- influencing grant writing: Perceptions of ten- Council on Education, Onyx Press. sponse rate to the survey was 60%. To the ured and nontenured faculty. SRA Journal, 29(3- American Journal of Health Education — January/February 2003, Volume 34, No. 1 53

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.